Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

Read publications and other informational products to learn more about USGS science occurring in the Mississippi Basin.

Filter Total Items: 5567

Aquatic habitat mapping with an acoustic doppler current profiler: Considerations for data quality Aquatic habitat mapping with an acoustic doppler current profiler: Considerations for data quality

When mounted on a boat or other moving platform, acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCPs) can be used to map a wide range of ecologically significant phenomena, including measures of fluid shear, turbulence, vorticity, and near-bed sediment transport. However, the instrument movement necessary for mapping applications can generate significant errors, many of which have not been...
Authors
David Gaeuman, Robert B. Jacobson

Spatiotemporal patterns of fish assemblage structure in a river impounded by low-head dams Spatiotemporal patterns of fish assemblage structure in a river impounded by low-head dams

We studied spatiotemporal patterns of fish assemblage structure in the Neosho River, Kansas, a system impounded by low-head dams. Spatial variation in the fish assemblage was related to the location of dams that created alternating lotic and lentic stream reaches with differing fish assemblages. At upstream sites close to dams, assemblages were characterized by species associated with...
Authors
David P. Gillette, Jeremy S. Tiemann, David R. Edds, Mark L. Wildhaber

Species frequency dynamics in an old-field succession: Effects of disturbance, fertilization and scale Species frequency dynamics in an old-field succession: Effects of disturbance, fertilization and scale

Question: Can patterns of species frequency in an old-field be explained within the context of a metapopulation model? Are the patterns observed related to time, spatial scale, disturbance, and nutrient availability?Location: Upland and lowland old-fields in Illinois, USA.Method: Species richness was recorded annually for seven years following plowing of an upland and lowland old-field...
Authors
David J. Gibson, Beth A. Middleton, K. Foster, Y. A. K. Honu, E. W. Hoyer, M. Mathis

Acute and chronic toxicity of lead in water and diet to the amphipod Hyalella azteca Acute and chronic toxicity of lead in water and diet to the amphipod Hyalella azteca

We evaluated the influence of waterborne and dietary lead (Pb) exposure on the acute and chronic toxicity of Pb to the amphipod Hyalella azteca. Test solutions were generated by a modified diluter with an extended (24‐h) equilibration period. Acute (96‐h) toxicity of Pb varied with water hardness in the range of 71 to 275 mg/L as CaCO3, despite similar dissolved Pb concentrations. Acute...
Authors
J.M. Besser, W. G. Brumbaugh, E.L. Brunson, C.G. Ingersoll

Selenium impacts on razorback sucker, Colorado River, Colorado: II. Eggs Selenium impacts on razorback sucker, Colorado River, Colorado: II. Eggs

Effects on hatching and development of fertilized eggs in adult razorback sucker (Xyrauchen texanus) exposed to selenium in flooded bottomland sites near Grand Junction, Colorado, were determined. After 9 months exposure, fish were collected and induced to spawn and eggs collected for inorganic element analyses. A 9-day egg study was conducted with five spawns from Horsethief ponds, six...
Authors
S. J. Hamilton, K.M. Holley, K.J. Buhl, F.A. Bullard

Improving removal-based estimates of abundance by sampling a population of spatially distinct subpopulations Improving removal-based estimates of abundance by sampling a population of spatially distinct subpopulations

A statistical modeling framework is described for estimating the abundances of spatially distinct subpopulations of animals surveyed using removal sampling. To illustrate this framework, hierarchical models are developed using the Poisson and negative-binomial distributions to model variation in abundance among subpopulations and using the beta distribution to model variation in capture
Authors
R.M. Dorazio, H.L. Jelks, F. Jordan

Early mortality syndrome in Great Lakes salmonines Early mortality syndrome in Great Lakes salmonines

Early mortality syndrome (EMS) is the termused to describe an embryonic mortality affectingthe offspring of salmonines (coho salmonOnco-rhynchus kisutch, Chinook salmonOncorhynchustshawytscha, steelhead [anadromous rainbow troutOncorhynchus mykiss], brown troutSalmo trutta,and lake trout,Salvelinus namaycush) in LakesMichigan and Ontario and, to a lesser extent, LakesHuron and Erie...
Authors
Dale C. Honeyfield, Scott B. Brown, John D. Fitzsimons, Donald E. Tillitt

Southern marl prairies conceptual ecological model Southern marl prairies conceptual ecological model

About 190,000 ha of higher-elevation marl prairies flank either side of Shark River Slough in the southern Everglades. Water levels typically drop below the ground surface each year in this landscape. Consequently, peat soil accretion is inhibited, and substrates consist either of calcitic marl produced by algal periphyton mats or exposed limestone bedrock. The southern marl prairies...
Authors
S.M. Davis, W.F. Loftus, E.E. Gaiser, A.E. Huffman

Water dispersal of vegetative bulbils of the invasive exotic Dioscorea oppositifolia L. in southern Illinois Water dispersal of vegetative bulbils of the invasive exotic Dioscorea oppositifolia L. in southern Illinois

Riparian corridors promote dispersal of several species of exotic invasives worldwide. Dispersal plays a role in the colonization of exotic invasive species into new areas and this study was conducted to determine if the invasiveness of Dioscorea oppositifolia L. (Chinese yam) is facilitated by secondary dispersal of vegetative diaspores (bulbils) by water. Since seed production of this...
Authors
J.R. Thomas, D.J. Gibson, B.A. Middleton

Temporal and spatial variation of early mortality syndrome in salmonids from Lakes Michigan and Huron Temporal and spatial variation of early mortality syndrome in salmonids from Lakes Michigan and Huron

To assess the extent that early mortality syndrome (EMS) impacts different Pacific salmonid stocks and the association of EMS with thiamine, we collected eggs of coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch from three Lake Michigan tributaries (Platte River, Thompson Creek, and Root River) in 1996-2001. We also obtained eggs of Chinook salmon O. tshawytscha from Lake Michigan (Little Manistee River)...
Authors
M. Wolgamood, J.G. Hnath, S.B. Brown, K. Moore, S.V. Marcquenski, D. C. Honeyfield, J. P. Hinterkopf, J.D. Fitzsimons, D. E. Tillitt
Was this page helpful?